Nichelle Gainer knows a thing or two about glamour: She spent most of her career working for magazines like “Woman’s Day,” “GQ,” “Us Weekly,” and “InStyle,” with a focus on celebrity, fashion, and grooming. But her true passion is fiction, so she decided to write a novel about black beauty pageants in the 1950s, partially inspired by one of her two glamorous aunts, who was a model in the 1950s—the other was an opera singer who rubbed shoulders with the biggest celebrities of her day.

“If people know about Josephine Baker, they think of her in the banana skirt. Same with Eartha Kitt as Catwoman. But there’s so much more to these women.”

Looking for newspaper articles on her aunt, she discovered a whole world of history that hardly ever bubbles to the surface: stunning, well-dressed African American stars celebrated in the black community, and sometimes even in the mainstream. Gainer put her fiction work aside to focus on these real-life stories.

Eventually, Gainer started a Tumblr and Facebook fan page, both called Vintage Black Glamour, full of gorgeous images that rarely make it into the public consciousness. While her novel went onto the back burner, her web sites drew the attention of a London publisher, Rocket 88. Gainer’s first book, a nonfiction coffee-table tome about women celebrities, Vintage Black Glamour, which will come out this September, can be preordered now.

We spoke with Gainer over the phone, and she explained to us the stories behind the photos she’s found, why glamour is important, and why Vintage Black Glamour will be more than just a collection of pretty pictures.

Nichelle Gainer: The storyline of my novel, which is yet not finished, is partially inspired by my 83-year-old aunt, Mildred Taylor. In the 1950s, she did some small-time modeling walking the runway at little local fashion shows and after-church shows and posing for pictures.

She also competed in what they called “Negro beauty contests.” In those days, black women were not allowed to compete in Miss America, which was the biggest pageant in the U.S. at that time. It was written into Miss America’s bylaws, the infamous Rule No. 7: “Contestant must be in good health and of the white race.” The Miss America organization, to their credit, has worked hard to clear all that racism out since the 1960s, when they first allowed black women to compete in the pageant.

Before then, if black women wanted to be in pageants, they had to go somewhere else. Of course, many of the smaller pageants wouldn’t let black women in, either. Some did, here and there. Black women kind of slipped in. Usually, they were the lighter-skinned black women, and the pageant hosts didn’t realize these women were not white until they said, “By the way, I’m black.” These women broke ground in a lot of ways.

Contestants in a “Negro beauty pageant” in Los Angeles in 1955. The third woman from the left is dancer and model Jeanna Limyou. (From the collection of Jim Linderman, vintagesleaze.blogspot.com)

When I first came up with the idea for a novel about the women who competed in the Negro beauty pageants, my aunt mentioned to me that she had appeared a few times in the local newspapers. I thought, “I’ll go through the old newspapers in the library and see if I can find her picture,” not at all expecting that I would find so many other women just like her, doing this local modeling. They were even kind of well-known. They were in the papers all the time—no names that anyone would know today, but they were famous in their own world. Unlike the coverage we received in the mainstream media of the day, in the black newspapers, we were full human beings. That’s why magazines like “Ebony” and “Jet” were started, to show births, marriages, deaths, social events, and things like educational achievement in the black community. We relied on these black newspapers and magazines.

“You have to respect the full person and what they went through. It wasn’t just a matter of, ‘Oh, they can’t go through the front door.’ There were all these micro-aggressions against black entertainers.”

In the course of my research, I came across a picture of another aunt, Margaret Tynes, who was an opera singer. And I said, “Wait a minute, I remember her!” I didn’t grow up knowing her, but my family, like a lot of black families, had these big reunions. As a teenager in the ’80s, I attended the Tynes family reunion in Smithfield, Virginia. I don’t know whether Aunt Margaret was there that year. What I remember is that she was certainly prominent in our family-reunion souvenir booklet. It was full of her pictures and reviews, as well as programs from her shows and her performance at Carnegie Hall. But at age 17, who did I care about? Prince, Michael Jackson, and Madonna. I wasn’t into opera at all, so I wasn’t that interested in learning about my aunt at the time.

But when I saw her picture 10-12 years later, I recognized her immediately. I ran out of the library, called my cousin Muriel, and asked, “Isn’t this our cousin or aunt?” By that time, Aunt Margaret had moved back to the U.S. after living in Italy for four years, because her husband had died. She was getting older, so her nephew moved her to a retirement home near his home.

Collectors Weekly: What are your aunts like?

Gainer’s aunt Margaret Tynes was a famous opera singer, who starred opposite Harry Belafonte and sang for Duke Ellington. Carl Van Vechten took this picture of her on September 29, 1959. (Via the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library)

Gainer: My Aunt Mildred, the former model, is like Diahann Carroll, fabulous like that at 83. Aunt Margaret is the same way, even if she’s a little slower now these days. She’s 94 but still stunning. She’s one of those people that if you met her, you would be like, “Who is this lady?” Her star power just comes across. I went to go meet her, and I didn’t know they had such nice retirement homes. The residents were like retired doctors and lawyers, the type of people that demand happy hour, with a full bar. I promise you, you have not lived until you’ve had happy hour with 90-year-olds.

There, I was able to speak with Aunt Margaret. She had donated a lot of her materials to her undergraduate alma mater, North Carolina A&T State in Greensboro, but she also had a lot of materials with her like pictures and poetry. Her father, a minister, had a doctorate, which in those days was rare for a black man, obviously. He was also a mathematician. He taught math, and he also wrote poetry. She still has one of his poems. I thought I would write a book about her called “A Diva in the Family.” But the more I researched about Aunt Margaret, the more I learned about these other glamorous women. As it would turn out, the introduction to “Vintage Black Glamour” is called “A Diva in the Family.”

Collectors Weekly: What inspired you to post the old pictures you found online?

Harry Belafonte and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., have a laugh. The actor put a good deal of money into the civil-right movement; once he raised $50,000 to bail King out of jail in Birmingham, Alabama. (Photo via the book “My Song” by Alfred A. Knopf)

Gainer: As the Internet came to be more accessible, useful, and professional-looking, I started fashion and beauty blogs while freelancing, as a way to keep my name out there, keep my foot in that world, and possibly get another magazine job. I wanted to do a book called Vintage Black Glamour, but I saw an opportunity when Facebook fan pages and Tumblr came about. I said to myself, “You know what, I can do a Vintage Black Glamour online.” On other Tumblrs, people were just showing the same old pictures of “black history.” Those images of Martin Luther King, Jr., at the podium are iconic, and they’re an important part of our history, but there’s so much more. And it’s right in front of our faces.

Today, a lot of the pictures that I spent hours looking at in libraries are available online. Many are in the Getty and Corbis archives. Sometimes I thought I had pictures of black celebrities that no one had seen in decades, maybe from old issues of “Ebony” or “Jet,” but didn’t realize that Getty and Corbis had them. So they’re accessible, and a lot of the time, they don’t have the same value placed on pictures of Marilyn Monroe, Audrey Hepburn, or Grace Kelly. I said, “You know what, I’m going to put these on a blog. I know there are other people out that would be fascinated to see other, less-well-known photos of our history.”

Josephine Baker, known as the “Ebony Venus,” and Russian-born French ballet star Serge Lifar, the “Bronze Apollo,” dance on the Lido beach in Venice, Italy in the 1930s. (Via Hotel des Ventes, Geneve)

For example, if people know about Josephine Baker, they think of her in the banana skirt. And every interview someone does with me, I run that banana skirt into the wall. There’s nothing wrong with it. I enjoy the banana skirt, and I also love Eartha Kitt as Catwoman. But there’s so much more to these women. And if you only have a stereotype of a person, you put them into a box. Whenever I post Eartha Kitt pictures, there’s always someone who will comment, “Marrrcus!” quoting from “Boomerang.” And haha, yes, that’s funny, but don’t limit her. It bothers me.

Eartha Kitt put up her own money for her career. Stars now, we look at them every week on TMZ, Facebook, and Twitter, and laugh about how they’re so rich and have all this stuff. In the early days of Hollywood, black stars like Eartha Kitt and Sammy Davis, Jr., had to put their own funds into their films. They had to write racist Southern theater owners and say, “Excuse me, this film is okay for your audience to see.” You have to respect the full person, what they did, and what they went through. It wasn’t just a matter of, “Oh, they can’t go through the front door. They can’t eat in this restaurant.” There were all these minor micro-aggressions, countless indignities they went through. For example, if your film is not shown in Southern theaters, you’re not getting the same money as the other stars. There was a whole lot of that.

Collectors Weekly: So the website led to the book?

Sammy Davis, Jr., and Eartha Kitt starred in “Anna Lucasta” in 1958—and also provided some of the financial backing for the film.

Gainer: Around 2005 to ’07, I pitched the Vintage Black Glamour idea to a few book agents, and they always came back with the same thing: No one’s going to want to do this because coffee-table books are too expensive to produce, and no one knows these people, that kind of thing. But Rocket 88 noticed my Tumblr page. They actually contacted me via Twitter. I never would have expected a small publisher in London to pick up my work, but they do a great job. I’m really lucky. The agents I pitched are going to be proven wrong.

Collectors Weekly: Where do you go to find the photos for Vintage Black Glamour?

In 1966, Eartha Kitt leaps through a sign in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to help a program for the Citizens Committee on Hill District Renewal. (Photo by Charles “Teenie” Harris, of the “Pittsburgh Courier,” via Carnegie Museum of Art)

Gainer: I get them from old magazines and newspapers, as well as Getty and Corbis. And a lot of libraries have their digital archives online, like the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, which is part of the New York Public Library system, and the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University. I may find great photos from somebody else at Tumblr, and I will repost those, as long as it has the photographer’s name or the source. I make sure I credit it. That’s been helpful for me as we’ve been preparing the book because we need those credits. You have to pay fees for every picture, obviously, so you have to know where it’s from. When I first started Vintage Black Glamour, I posted scans or photocopies from my own photo collection from libraries. If I had the photocopy or a book, I would just scan the picture and put that up.

Collectors Weekly: How important were “Ebony” and “Jet” as resources?

Diahann Carroll on the April 15, 1954, cover of “Jet.”

Gainer: “Ebony” was started in 1945, and “Jet” in 1951. John H. Johnson founded both. “Ebony” was inspired by “Life” magazine, because there was no equivalent that showed black people just doing everyday things, whether they were celebrities, black society people, or athletes. Black people were not included in the typical newspapers unless they were superstars like Sarah Vaughan or Billie Holiday. Even then, they were not written about in feature articles. Mainstream publications wouldn’t put black people on the cover of a magazine. Today, Beyoncé or whomever will be in the paper like anyone else. But in those days, that was not the case.

“Ebony” and “Jet” are the most popular black magazines, the ones that everyone knows. But there were also other magazines like “Our World” and “Sepia.” There were black newspapers, which I used for researching my novel. Every now and then, if the picture is clear, I can use pictures from the old black newspapers, and I have—from the “Pittsburgh Courier,” from the “Chicago Defender,” the “New York Amsterdam News,” the “Los Angeles Journal,” and “Negro Digest.”

I need to have that many sources to get perspective, because you can’t always trust celebrity magazines, especially the ones that were reverential. Today, if you’re reading “Us Weekly,” they’re going to have lawyers vetting it. Back in the old days, celebrities could say whatever they wanted. Even if it was in “Ebony” in 1957, I’ve got to fact-check—maybe this person said that they’re 32 but they were actually 42 at the time.

Collectors Weekly: You’ve also got people on your site who contributed not just to entertainment, but also to the civil-rights movement and literature.

Gainer: Yeah, because I feel like that’s glamorous, too. I feel like Vintage Black Glamour expands the definition of glamour, and that was always my intention. For example, I put Judge Jane Bolin on my site. She’s very popular, the first black woman appointed to a bench in New York State. She was on the bench until she was 70, the mandatory retirement age. People would say she’s attractive, but she wasn’t a movie star or even glamorous dresser. However, the nature of a black woman judge in the 1930s or ’40s is glamorous to me.

To me, glamour is when you’re able to operate in the world with a certain level of dignity. So that applies whether they’re leaders in civil rights, literature, or art. I’m so excited Lorraine Hansberry’s in my book, next to Maya Angelou. Look at Althea Gibson, the tennis player, who was photographed by Carl Van Vechten in the 1950s. No one thinks “glamour” when they look at Althea Gibson, but she had her dignity. Take Esther Rolle, who played Florida Evans on “Good Times”: No one thinks of her as glamorous, either, but then again, her photo is the most popular picture that I ever posted on Vintage Black Glamour.

Collectors Weekly: On your Tumblr, I noticed that you feature both men and women, but is your book just about women?

Jane Bolin was the first black woman to graduate from Yale Law School, and in 1939, she made headlines when the New York mayor appointed her to the Domestic Relations Court, making her the first black female judge in the U.S.

Gainer: In my first book, yes. In fact, when I first started the blog, I was only going to do women. But then I couldn’t resist. I said, “Oh my God, I’ve got to put these men here!” But this book is just women, and the next book will be men. There’s so much history that I could barely fit all the people that I wanted in this book. I want to tell their stories as best as I can. There are a lot of lesser-known men, and I want them to have their shine, just like I’m giving in my book to some of these women who are not as well-known as Lena Horne and Diana Ross. With a women’s book and a men’s, I can give everyone their day.

Collectors Weekly: Can you talk more about how these celebrities were breaking through race barriers?

Lena Horne pictured in a 1940s MGM publicity photo.

Gainer: The focus of my book is 1900 to 1980, but I touch on artists and performers in the late 19th century, when black people were portrayed as Pickaninnys eating watermelon, Sambos, or Aunt Jemimas. The black artists at the time did what had to be done to contradict the man-made images that dehumanized us. Ada Overton Walker performed with Williams and Walker. She was married to George Walker, and his partner, Bert Williams, was a famous performer. They were black and performed in blackface, because that’s how they could get jobs. When they were in blackface, people didn’t know that they were black. But in many ways, they were subverting the narrative. They were like, “Okay, you’ll think this is stereotypical, until you get to the punchline.”

The Whitman sisters were black sisters in the late 1890s who looked white because they were biracial. But they would whiten their faces even more before they went onstage. Then, say, a black performer would appear onstage, and the audience would be uncomfortable until it was revealed that the sisters were black, too. That was another way of subverting the stereotypes in that blackface narrative.

Yes, they were trying to humanize black people, but also, as human beings, they just wanted to express themselves as artists. If they were painters, they wanted to paint. If they were dancers, they wanted to dance. They were fighting for the right to be themselves and to do what they do.

Ada Overton Walker is credited with popularizing the cakewalk, the 19th century dance craze that originated on slave plantations. In this photo, she’s dressed as her Salome character. (From the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts)

In the early 1900s, Ada Overton Walker, who was a dancer and singer, produced her shows. When her husband got sick, she played the male role in his place. She also spoke to the media, black media and white media, about her art. Just like now, if you’re a black person, the media’s going to ask you about race, even if you don’t want to talk about it. If you’re Ada Overton Walker in 1904 giving an interview, the paper is going to ask you, “What do you think about the Negro problem? Does your success mean that it’s getting better for the Negro?” They were forced to answer these questions whether they wanted to or not.

“I feel like Vintage Black Glamour expands the definition of glamour, and that was always my intention.”

Paul Robeson—a brilliant scholar, athlete, actor, and singer—struggled to get a decent role as an actor, because people only saw a stereotype when they saw him. He had to say, “Well, no, this script is unacceptable. This is not what a black male would say in this instance. This song is unacceptable. This is not how black people speak. I’m sitting here with you in this room. You can see that I’m a black person and I don’t speak in ’des and ’dos.”

Some early performers, of course, had a political bent to them, and wanted to talk about racism. But even if it was not their nature, they had to stand up to discrimination, for the sake of their careers. They broke barriers through how they carried themselves, how they spoke to the media, and what their performances represented.

Walker would be complimented for her Salome performances. Salome was a craze in those days, and mostly white dancers would portray Salome in way that was considered very sexy and risqué at the time. But Ada Overton Walker didn’t do the risqué thing because black women already had this reputation as overtly sexual. A lot of her reviews commented on how dignified and modest her performance was. I don’t know if she would’ve done it that way as a free artist. But she purposely said, “You know what, I’m going to portray it in this way because I recognize that it’s not just about me. If I do the risqué version, I’m not going to be reviewed like these white dancers are reviewed. Instead, all black women will be labeled as sexy whores like Salome.”

Collectors Weekly: Didn’t some performers, like Hattie McDaniel in “Gone With the Wind,” have to take stereotypical roles?

Nina Mae McKinney with William E. Fountaine and Daniel Haynes in a still from the 1929 film “Hallelujah!”

Gainer: Some of them said, “Okay, I’ll compromise a little bit. I don’t speak like this, but I’ll do ‘Hallelujah!'” Nina Mae McKinney was the first black woman to sign a deal with a Hollywood studio. Everyone thinks it was Lena Horne, but Nina Mae McKinney’s deal predated hers. If you look at McKinney’s first movie, it had all these brilliant actors. If you see the B roll of the film, you’d see the actors didn’t use the ’dem and ’des and ’dos in real life. That’s not how black people actually spoke. They had to work hard to play those parts.

So these celebrities also broke barriers by taking roles for visibility. Others rejected the pressure put on them from all sides. They said, “The way I’m fighting this fight is by being myself despite the rules.” Or, “I’m fighting the fight by breaking the rules. I know you think black women or black men should behave in this way, but like Jack Johnson said, I don’t really care what you think. I’m going to date white women whether you like it or not.” Pearl Bailey in the 1950s married a white man, and the black community was like, “Why?” She said, “I’m marrying this man because I love him.”

They broke barriers just by living their lives and by operating in their full right as human beings, marrying who they wanted, singing the songs they wanted, either declining work or accepting the work they wanted, creating work for themselves and for other people, donating their money and time to civil-rights organizations. Sammy Davis Jr. gave a lot of money to those organizations. So did Nat King Cole. A lot of the stars that you wouldn’t necessarily think of as civil-rights activists gave money to Dr. King. Harry Belafonte gave quite a bit; he has always put his money where his mouth is.

Then, the beneficiaries down the line, the Diana Rosses, the Tina Turners, they were breaking barriers, too. A lot of people said to them, “This is how black people should behave; you’re too white, being around these white people.” To Diahann Carroll, they’d say, “Why do you have so many white people around you?” A lot of these entertainers just did what felt right to them as a person, what they felt right for their career and for their life, whether or not people thought it was black enough, woman enough, or American enough.

Gainer: People have always been telling black women what they should be doing. Women, period, of course. I’m sure you’ve heard of the lesbian nightclub singer Gladys Bentley. I have a great picture of her in my book. Talk about breaking the barriers—she would purposely change the song lyrics, with a wink and a nod, to bawdy ones, which she would sing in the gay clubs, downtown and also uptown. She didn’t do the bawdy stuff on her recordings, but she certainly did it in performance, wearing a tuxedo. She married a woman in a ceremony in Atlantic City in the ’20s—a white woman, too.

“Yes, they were trying to humanize black people, but also, as human beings, they just wanted to express themselves as artists.”

Unfortunately, in the ’50s, as that conservative hammer came down, she claimed that God saved her from homosexuality, and she was no longer a lesbian. According to her, she was a married woman, even though the man she claimed she was married to said he was not her husband. Of course, a lot of people in the ’50s had these salvation experiences, where all of a sudden, they’re going to be an evangelist. So Bentley became an evangelist for a while, and her health suffered. She really struggled.

Say you’ve made your money all these years, living your life out loud, being Gladys Bentley, and then the ’40s and ’50s come. Suddenly, America is more conservative. Now, people are more paying attention, thinking you’re a devil. You can’t get a job singing, so you’re working in a department store. You’re going to say, “Okay, yeah, God saved me. Great.” Because you have to eat. Money is freedom. Contrast that to the singer and music critic Nora Holt: She was able do whatever the hell she wanted to do her entire life, because she had all this money from her rich ex-husbands. She didn’t have to bow down and say what people wanted her to say.

Collectors Weekly: In your book, you talk about black women who were working on anti-lynching and suffragist causes in the 1890s.

A writer, educator, and activist Mary Church Terrell, born to former slaves, was the first president of the National Association of Colored Women, which adopted the motto “Lifting As We Climb.”

Gainer: Even as late as the ’50s, they were still working on anti-lynching campaigns, and it’s a shame that was still necessary. I have a great picture that’s never been seen anywhere, one particular actor who’s wearing an anti-lynching armband, which was another way of outwardly protesting. Like I said, some actors were more political than others. They might join marches or say strong words in the media and risk being blackballed in Hollywood. It’s not that others who were not overtly political didn’t care; it just was not their thing. But people in every field, including acting and modeling, benefitted from the Ida B. Wellses and the Mary Church Terrells, the women who formed black women’s clubs in the 1890s. These are the women that opened it up.

“I promise you, you have not lived until you’ve had happy hour with 90-year-olds.”

In the 1890s, they founded these clubs because this fool, J.W. Jacks, a Missouri newspaper man, actually wrote an article about how black women were openly lascivious and immoral. You know the routine: “You’re all immoral, overtly sexual whores,” that whole “you can’t rape black women” type of thing. In response to it, these black women formed organizations, like the National Association of Colored Women, whose motto was “Lifting As We Climb.” They defended themselves, essentially saying, regular black women are not like this and neither are we educated black women who look like white women. The clubs talked to other women suffrage groups, and to other organizations who were going for housing or education.

Someone had to sing for the associations’ galas, so these groups connected with artists. In some ways it was good, and in some ways it was not-so-good, because you would have W.E.B. Du Bois trying to police the entertainers. He was saying, “If it’s not advancing the race, then there’s no point in art.” And Zora Neale Hurston said, “Excuse me, I’m interested in why human beings do what they do. So if I’m writing about a woman and a man, I’m interested in them as a woman and a man. I’m not writing to answer the race question in everything I do.”

Collectors Weekly: At that time, the idea of respectability was really important?

Gainer: Yes, and it’s still important. A lot of people of today, they embrace “respectability politics” and the idea that black people have to behave in a certain way because otherwise it’ll reflect badly on other black people. But I promise you, Nicki Minaj is not reflected on me. I don’t care what anyone says. She can do what she wants. I’m not mad at Nicki Minaj, and what she does doesn’t have anything to do with me. I choose that. But I can understand the urgency of the idea decades ago because you know what? Back then it did matter.

Take the picture of Beyoncé on the cover of “Time” in a swimsuit. I saw that, and I wasn’t upset because it’s Beyoncé. She probably gave them that picture. She sat for that. Beyoncé could have easily said, “You know what, I want to wear an evening gown.” Or “I want to wear jeans and a T-shirt.” She’s not some puppet. She is participating in her image creation.

Sixty years ago, though, Beyoncé would have just been in the black newspapers. And of course, because of the limits of photo-imaging technology in old newspapers, you don’t see as many photos as you do today. Today, a photo almost always accompanies an article. In the magazines, a photo traditionally accompanies the article. In the past, the most flattering, dignified pictures would be in the “Ebonys” and the “Jets.” Lena Horne might be in “Life” magazine, but she was not in “Mademoiselle,” “Vogue,” or “Glamour” 60 years ago. Now you have Rihanna and Beyoncé on the covers of those magazines.

The stars of “Julia,” Diahann Carroll and Fred Williamson, on the cover of the Dec. 26-Jan 1, 1971 issue of “TV Guide.”

I remember 20 years ago, I knew a publicist, a white woman who represented Janet Jackson. She told me that “TV Guide” would not put Janet on the cover, because she’s black and they thought it wouldn’t sell. Janet Jackson! She was already a multimillionaire superstar, famous her whole life, and freaking “TV Guide” of all places, really, you can’t put Janet Jackson on the cover? At the time, you couldn’t put Janet Jackson on the cover of “Vogue,” for example. But now, all kinds of black people are on the covers of fashion magazines, like Lupita Nyong’o, who is on the July cover of “Vogue.”

“It was written into Miss America’s bylaws, the infamous Rule No. 7: ‘Contestant must be in good health and of the white race.'”

Appearing in magazines is image control, too, because after a while, if people don’t see black celebrities or models in old magazines, they assume black women didn’t do Hollywood glamour. Now, we have these beautiful coffee-table books with Audrey Hepburn, Grace Kelly, and the old Hollywood goddesses like Jean Harlow. But you can say, “Look, I have a lot of these old Hollywood books, and I don’t see any black people in there, therefore, they must not have been there.” They’ll have Mexican actress Dolores del Rio. Then, they might slide in a picture, like I saw in a book about Kennedy, where they put in one picture of Dorothy Dandridge. One picture! So that’s why people are fascinated. They say, “Where did you find these pictures?” The pictures I have are right in front of your face. You just weren’t looking for them because it never occurred to you.

Vintage Black Glamour is a pretty, glossy coffee-table book, and as much as I’ve worked on the text, most people are going to concentrate on the pictures. And that’s great. Look at the pictures and read the captions, because at least that will be a bit of a history lesson for you. It’s kind of like the mother whose baby doesn’t like spinach, so she hides the spinach in the peaches. That’s what Vintage Black Glamour is. It’s good for you, but it’s in a pretty package. You’re not going to get out of it what you expect.

Collectors Weekly: Clearly, it’s more than pretty people in pretty clothes.

Dorothy Dandridge, on the set of “Carmen Jones” at a RKO studio lot in Hollywood in 1954.

Gainer: Exactly. I love pretty clothes. But I’ve had some people say, “Why do they have to be glamorous?” Those people don’t take glamour seriously, to them it’s not important. I said to them, “Fashion is a multimillion-dollar business. You can be glamorous and stylish, but it doesn’t mean you don’t have substance. There’s nothing wrong with being interested in fashion and beauty.”

A lot of people think of vintage black pictures as either civil-rights photos or black ladies at church, or maybe sharecroppers picking in the cotton fields and sweating from the hard work. That’s fine. Those are our pictures. But that shouldn’t be the only image of us. It’s nice to see a black woman who is not sweating in the field, but glistening from all this bling, like Josephine Baker, dripping in diamonds. Sometimes you want to see that. Why not? It’s easy to take glamour for granted. You can be a white woman, and you can care less about Bette Davis, Jean Harlow, Greta Garbo, and Marlene Dietrich, and that’s fine. But you know what? Black women haven’t had the same option.

Florence Mills, a singer, was one of the earliest black superstars, pictured here on August 1, 1923, in "Dover Street to Dixie" at the London Pavilion. (Bassano/National Portrait Gallery, London)

Florence Mills, a singer, was one of the earliest black superstars, pictured here on August 1, 1923, in "Dover Street to Dixie" at the London Pavilion. (Bassano/National Portrait Gallery, London)

Harold Jackman, a public schoolteacher and patron of the arts, was best known as a prominent figure in the Harlem Renaissance. He's pictured in an undated photograph, likely 1920s, by Max Ewing and in a 1940 photo by his friend Carl Van Vechten. (From the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library)

Elisabeth Welch, the American singer who introduced "The Charleston” on Broadway before becoming a superstar in England, was photographed by Carl Van Vechten on January 19, 1933. (From the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library)

Poet, social activist, novelist, playwright, and columnist Langston Hughes, born 1902, works at his typewriter. (From the New York Public Library)

Cotton Club dancer Margot Webb was born Marjorie Smith in Harlem in 1910. As a young woman, she dropped out of Hunter College and began her career in dance. (Photo by Harry Possner via AmericanMemorabilia.com)

Nora Holt, photographed with a marionette by Carl Van Vechten on August 29, 1937, was the first African American to earn a master’s degree in music. She was a music critic for two pre-eminent black newspapers, the "Chicago Defender" and the "New York Amsterdam News." (From the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library)

This rare color photograph of writer Zora Neale Hurston was taken by Carl Van Vechten in 1940. (From the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library)

Josephine Baker in Paris, 1940, around the time she joined the French Counterespionage Services. (Photo by Studio Harcourt, Ministry of Culture, France)

Dancer and actress Louise Franklin with Duke Ellington in a 1941 publicity photo for his musical, “Jump for Joy.” (Photo by John Reed, Herald Examiner Collection, Los Angeles Public Library)

A 1969 ad for Olivetti typewriters called “Duke Ellington at the Keys."

Pearl Bailey in her dressing room in 1946. Photo by Paul S. Henderson, a photographer for the "Richmond Afro-American" newspaper. (Via the Maryland Historical Society.)

This photo of Ella Fitzgerald was taken by William Gottlieb in November 1946. (Via The Library of Congress)

Sara Lou Harris was one of the first black models to appear in national advertisements in the late 1940s. (From the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, New York Public Library)

Lena Horne had her own line of cosmetics, advertised here in 1959. Gloria Swanson was an investor in the brand.

Actress and journalist Ruby Dee with baseball great Jackie Robinson in a still from the 1950 movie, "The Jackie Robinson Story."

Four young women on Chicken Bone Beach, which was the only two-block stretch of sand in Atlantic City, New Jersey, black tourists were allowed to use in the 1950s. (Photo by John W. Mosley, courtesy of the Charles L. Blockson Afro-American Collection, Temple University Libraries)

James Baldwin and Nina Simone, circa 1960s. (Via the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.)

Young Sammy Davis, Jr., who was also a photographer, takes a selfie.

Davis was the first black man to appear on the cover of "GQ," for the September 1967 issue.

Sammy Davis, Jr., and Gregory Hines in a promo photo for their 1989 movie, "Tap."

Diahann Carroll in a 1961 ad for Camel cigarettes.

Carroll modeling swimwear fashion (and muumuus) in the January 1971 issue of "Ebony."

Cicely Tyson trained models and actresses at the charm school run by modeling pioneer Ophelia DeVore. Here, the two women get off a plane in the early 1960s. (Via OpheliaDeVore.com)

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote the first draft of his book, “Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community?” at a secluded rental home in Ocho Rios, Jamaica. He was joined by his wife, Coretta Scott King, his aide, Rev. Bernard Lee, and his secretary, Dora McDonald. The photos, taken in January and February 1967, appeared in the June 1967 issue of "Ebony."

A page in a magazine spread shows Aretha Franklin in her dressing room at Newark Symphony Hall in Newark, New Jersey, in 1969.

Diana Ross on the July 1973 cover of "Ebony" with daughters Tracee and Rhonda.

Actress Alfre Woodard as a student in a Boston University production of "Thesmophoriazousae" by Aristophenes in February 1974. (Photo by Boston University Photography)

Esther Rolle, known as Florida Evans in "Good Times," tries on a dress at Joseph Magnin in Beverly Hills in 1974. (Photo by Isaac Sutton from the Ted Williams and Ebony Collection at Art.com)

Iman wears a dress by Giorgio Sant’ Angelo in a 1976 Avon advertisement.

Whitney Houston with Arthur Mitchell, Cicely Tyson and her mother, Cissy Houston on December 9, 1988. (Photo courtesy of Robert Garland of the Dance Theater of Harlem)

Wow! Great article. I would love to read this book. I am white… The history and everything you said is very fascinating. And you are exactly right… in many older entertainment books they do not show these stars and their lifestyles, so I had assumed there were just a handful of them. This looks like a high-quality effort. It makes me feel good to see that people were living it up in this way, not just the ‘whites’ in the entertainment industry. Can’t wait to see the clothes : )